- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
Internet Archive and Wikipedia are two websites that need to exist in perpetuity.
To do that they need to make sure they have adequate funding and make sure they don’t incur some huge financial liabilities somehow. The Internet Archive failed at that last part when they decided to lend out ebooks that are under copyright without many limits (and potentially with their Great 78 Project regarding music as well).
They need to be publicly funded like we do with PBS. They’re to great of a resource to have corporations trying to destroy them.
FYI PBS gets very little from public funding.
Well that’s shitty. We need Mr. Rogers to rise like jesus and fix it.
I wrote that then deleted it cause I wasn’t sure how you address it internationally. Where PBS is broadcast in the USA, the internet is open to the world.
But, you’re right! It should be publicly funded. I’d have no problem with my tax dollars going towards that.
True, I don’t know how this would work for international stuff, but this is human knowledge and history, it’s something we should be archiving and not tossing to the wind.
Indeed, which is why I’m furious at the Internet Archive’s leadership for merrily dancing out into a minefield completely unbidden.
Wikipedia? The free encyclopedia that only the State Department can edit? 🤣🙄